ST. PAUL — Almost 1 million Minnesotans would receive larger property tax refunds, or their first refunds, under a House Democratic proposal.

Rep. Jim Davnie, DFL-Minneapolis, said the House plan would establish the homestead credit refund, spending $250 million to replace existing homeowner tax refunds and expand a renters’ refund. More than 300,000 homeowners would get bigger refunds; that is 75 percent of those who file for refunds.

Davnie said the average homeowner’s refund would rise $212.

Also, 100,000 more homeowners would be eligible for a refund, and the state would attempt to convince more to apply.

The average renter would get $179 more a year. Property tax relief would be made available to 340,000 renters.

“Providing comprehensive property tax relief will put more money in the pockets of middle-class Minnesotans and help move our state forward on more sustainable and reliable financial ground,” Davnie said.

Rep. Ben Lien, DFL-Moorhead, said rural Minnesotans’ property taxes went up eight times more than others.

Included in the DFL bill are provisions to simplify Local Government Aid the state pays to cities. The House would increase spending $60 million for cities and $28 million for counties.

Lien and Davnie said added aid will help keep down city property taxes, but there is nothing in the bill requiring the added money be used to cut taxes.

“This bill targets the cities’ unmet needs,” Lien said.

Davnie said even with the House DFL bill, state payments to cities would remain below 2003 levels.

Schools’ future questioned

Two Twin Cities schools’ future rests in legislators’ hands.

A multi-school district board governing Crosswinds school in Woodbury and Harambee in Maplewood decided to give away the facilities, but Minnesota Management and Budget ruled the only thing it can do without legislative approval is to sell the buildings. Doing anything else needs support from three-fifths of lawmakers voting.

The Perpich Center for Arts Education wants to take over Crosswinds, which has served students in grades 6 through 10, and keep the current curriculum that emphasizes science and arts with a diversified student body.

The South Washington County School District also would like the Crosswinds building, but only has a tentative plan for how it would be used.

“This is a great, unique initiative,” Rep. Peter Fischer, DFL-Maplewood, said about Crosswinds during a Tuesday House meeting.

“It is important to continue the vision that was created years ago...” he said. “We just need some permission from the Legislature.”

Chairwoman Alice Hausman, DFL-St. Paul, of the House Capital Investment Committee said there is confusion among competing Crosswinds interests because many do not understand that since the school originally was funded by state money the Legislature must decide its fate.

Rep. Ryan Winkler, DFL-Golden Valley, said while his bill would give Crosswinds to the Perpich center, he expects a Senate bill to propose giving the facility to South Washington schools.

“That makes us very uncompetitive,” he said, making it difficult to even keep up Minnesotans’ in-state tourism.

Neighboring states spend far more than Minnesota provides, Mattson said. He told the committee the state “needs to spend money to make money.”

Mattson’s testimony came during debate on a bill to dedicate the 6.2 percent tax on rental vehicles to tourism marketing. The committee will consider the bill as part of an overall tax bill.

Drumming for education

The Little Earth drum group and singers of Minneapolis opened a Tuesday state Capitol rally for American Indian education.

Director Larry Pogemiller of the Office of Higher Education said Indians should be following this year’s Legislature because Gov. Mark Dayton’s budget plan calls for adding funds to education, including money for Indians on higher education waiting lists.

He also promoted early-childhood funding Dayton and Democrats who run the House and Senate want to increase.

Stadium funding on tap

Minnesota lawmakers who oversee public sports venues plan to soon address lower-than-expected electronic pull tab revenues set to fund construction of a new Vikings stadium.

“There’s a great deal of concern in the community,” Rep. Jim Davnie, DFL-Minneapolis, said of the lagging funds.

Legislative Commission on Minnesota Sports Facilities members agreed at their first meeting Tuesday to focus an upcoming meeting mainly on the revenue issue.

Republican Sen. Julie Rosen of Fairmont will be the other co-chairman.

Michele Kelm-Helgen, chairwoman of the Minnesota Sports Facilities Authority, said the stadium project is on track so far, with the first $50 million coming from the Vikings as planned.

She said it was anticipated the new e-pull tabs program would take some time to ramp up.

So far, the state has raised less than $2 million from the electronic games. Projections show expected revenues of about $23 million next year and $28 million in 2015, a $46 million drop from earlier estimates.

Kelm-Helgen said she is confident the stadium will be built “on time and on budget.” Construction is expected to start in October.

Thousands of employees will work on the building, and Kelm-Helgen said the aim is most will be Minnesotans.

“We really are focused on Minnesota workers,” she said.

She updated the group on stadium progress Tuesday and said detailed designs should be available in the coming weeks.

Don Davis has been the Forum Communications Minnesota Capitol Bureau chief since 2001, covering state government and politics for two dozen newspapers in the state. Don also blogs at Capital Chatter on Areavoices.